COMPASSION

Affirmation of life is the spiritual act by which man ceases to live thoughtlessly and begins to devote himself to his life
with reverence in order to give it true value.
— Albert Schweitzer

11/30/2013

Positive Thinking Warning Animate - Smile or Die




 Uploaded on Mar 17, 2010
 
Acclaimed journalist, author and political activist Barbara Ehrenreich explores the darker side of positive thinking.
Watch the full lecture here: http://www.thersa.org/events/video/ar...

The RSA is a 258 year-old charity devoted to creating social progress and spreading world-changing ideas. For more information about our research, RSA Animates, free events programme and 27,000 strong fellowship.
Find out more about the RSA at http://www.thersa.org
Join the RSA on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/thersaorg
------
Produced and edited by Abi Stephenson, RSA. Animation by Cognitive Media.

Necessary Changes

Image preview


The more severe the pain or illness, the more severe will be the necessary changes.  These may involve breaking bad habits, or acquiring some new ones.


For many, negative thinking is a habit, which over time, becomes an addiction... A lot of people suffer from this disease because negative thinking is addictive to each of the Big Three -- the mind, the body, and the emotions. If one doesn't get you, the others are waiting in the wings.

The little things? The little moments? They aren’t little.  JKZ



"The very substance of the ambitious is merely the shadow of a dream." -William Shakespeare


“If you don't feel it, flee from it. Go where you are celebrated, not merely tolerated.” ― Paul F. Davis

 
"And the Day came when the risk it took to remain tight in a bud, was even more painful then the risk it took to blossom"- Anis Nin


The secret of change is to focus all of your energy, not on fighting the old, but on building the new.
- Socrates


"What saves a man is to take a step. Then another step."
- C. S. Lewis


Embrace Change


The world hates change, yet it is the only thing that has brought progress
– Charles F. Kettering


An investment in life is an investment in change... When you are changing all the time, you've got to continue to keep adjusting to change, which means that you are going to be constantly facing new obstacles.  That's the joy of living.  And once you're involved in the process of becoming, there is no stopping.
- Leo F. Buscaglia



"All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy, for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter into another."
- Anatole France




"Become a student of change. It is the only thing that will remain constant."
- Anthony D'Angelo'
















11/26/2013

Rob Ford gets noticed outside Canada


“This isn’t Toronto,” says small-town sheriff after arresting Florida mayor on drug charges.



 
According to Athens Banner-Herald, where we get all our news, the mayor of Hampton, Florida (population 500) was arrested Monday on charges of possessing and selling oxycodone. Like Ford, Hampton Mayor Barry Layne Moore also has checkered past, including a 2012 charge for domestic battery.

The kicker? The Bradford County Sheriff’s statement following the arrest:
“This isn’t Toronto,” said Sheriff Gordon Smith. “We will not tolerate illegal drug activity in my jurisdiction by anyone to include [sic] our elected officials.”
 

Rob Ford looks like Chris Farley.






Read More: http://nowtoronto.com/news/story.cfm?content=195422



Silly Signs

image
I FEEL LIKE YOU SHOULDN’T BE TEACHING ME THIS.
It’s always amazing how many people don’t know how locks work. And how easy they are to pick.


 seanbonner:

tyleroakley:

decaffeinate-o:



I FEEL LIKE YOU SHOULDN’T BE TEACHING ME THIS.

It’s always amazing how many people don’t know how locks work. And how easy they are to pick.





 



 



 



 




 



 



 Medic-Alert Bracelet: Delete My Browser History






 theeconomist:

KAL’s cartoon: this week, a leak.




 lacigreen:

solid life advice for all that lifing you do everyday.



 Shit Just Got Surreal



 


 




 Map showing countries’ levels of cannabis use eh.







 









 



NYPD's ACT OF KINDNESS



Published on Nov 30, 2012
 
On the evening of November 14th, 2012, NYPD Officer Lawrence DePrimo bought a pair of boots for a homeless man in Times Square. His act of kindness was caught in a photo by an Arizona Tourist and has catapulted him to internet fame.(Photo courtesy of Jennifer Foster via NYPD Facebook)

License:  Standard YouTube license

The War on Thanksgiving




Photo by Richard W. Rodriguez/AP






The War on Thanksgiving

The right always whines about its contrived war on Christmas. But this year, the real assault is on Thanksgiving, when retail stores will be open—depriving thousands of their holiday.
Forget the war on Christmas. It’s time to talk about a more dangerous assault—the one being waged against Thanksgiving. And this war has real casualties: American families.

On Thursday, while most of us will be stuffing ourselves in the company of our loved ones—or at least our famil—thousands of others will be compelled to leave their Thanksgiving
celebrations to go to work. Why? Many retail chains have decided to open up their stores on Thanksgiving Day, including Walmart, Macy’s, Target, and Sears. Kmart is even opening at 6 a.m. on Thanksgiving morning, while the Gap will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. I guess that’s for people who are desperately in need of a pair of flat-front khakis on Thanksgiving.

We are constantly bombarded by whining from the right over its contrived war on Christmas. Sarah Palin even wrote a book—or at least she allegedly wrote one—about it, which she conveniently released in time for Christmas shopping. You would think the people who want to “keep Christ in Christmas” would be leading the charge to keep the “Thanks in Thanksgiving” and call on these stores to close so that employees could spend the day with their families.

But keeping retail stores closed on the holiday truly shouldn’t be a right or left issue. It should be one that, like Thanksgiving Day itself, unites all Americans regardless of political outlook, religion, or background. We should stand together in objecting to employees being forced to sacrifice their celebrations because the mammoth corporate chains have decided to open. And I say “forced” to work because let’s be honest: How many employees can tell their boss “no” when asked to work on Thanksgiving, when doing so could mean losing their job or hurting their career advancement?

Of course, we won’t see the CEOs of these companies working at the stores on Thanksgiving. Instead, we have corporate executives like Walmart vice president Duncan Mac Naughton trying to spin the story. “Walmart associates are really excited to work” on Thanksgiving because it’s a “pretty high energy day,” he says. I wonder how many Walmart execs will be at the store sharing in that “high energy” on Thanksgiving?

Thanksgiving has a special place in our nation’s history. It’s truly the quintessential American holiday. Our first Congress even passed a resolution in 1789 urging President Washington to proclaim a national day of thanks. (You have to wonder if our current dysfunctional Congress could even agree on a Thanksgiving resolution.) Washington obliged by issuing a proclamation that Thursday, November 26, 1789, would be a day of public thanksgiving.
Just to be clear: If you shop at a retail chain on Thanksgiving Day, you’re contributing to people not being with their families.
Thanksgiving now means many things to people. It’s a day when family members unite to celebrate their blessings. True, it may be painful to spend a full day with family, but that is why turkey is the perfect food—it makes us sleepy, allowing us to nap for a bit and avoid painful conversations with certain annoying relatives.

And for many, like me, Thanksgiving is also about remembering family members who are no longer with us. In my case, it’s my late father, who always prepared the Thanksgiving meal. We always spend at least a few moments during Thanksgiving reminiscing about him. I’m sure others also use this day as a bittersweet memorial to departed relatives.

But opening retail chains is a stake through the heart of the holiday. And just to be clear: If you shop at a retail chain on Thanksgiving Day, you’re contributing to people not being with their families. Think of that as you reach for that “greatly reduced” holiday sweater at Kmart.
It’s my hope that my fellow Americans will avoid patronizing these stores on Thursday so they don’t open again next Thanksgiving. It’s not like Thanksgiving is the only day retailers are offering deals or can rake in the profits. Plus, if you really feel compelled to shop Thursday, you can do so online.

We also should praise and patronize those retails chains that put family over profits and close on Thanksgiving, including Costco, Home Depot, Nordstrom, American Girl, and more. As Costco vice president Paul Latham says: “Our employees work especially hard during the holiday season, and we simply believe that they deserve the opportunity to spend Thanksgiving with their families.”

This Thursday, help keep the “thanks in Thanksgiving” by not shopping at a retail store. You will be playing a part in helping thousands of other Americans spend next Thanksgiving with their families.

 http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/11/26/the-war-on-thanksgiving.html

How to eradicate extreme poverty


Screen Shot 2013-11-21 at 11.14.34 AM

It can be done
Jun 6th 2013, 15:24 by Economist.com


THE world has done a remarkable job of lifting almost a billion people out of extreme poverty in the past 20 years. Doing so again by 2030 is possible but more difficult than before







William Carlos Williams



Marriage

by William Carlos Williams

So different, this man
And this woman:
A stream flowing
In a field.



“It is in tune with the tempo of life — scattered yet welded into the whole, — broken, yet woven together.”
―William Carlos Williams



“Poetry demands a different material than prose. It uses another facet of the same fact … the spontaneous conformation of language as it is heard.”
―William Carlos Williams


“Poets are being pursued by the philosophers today, out of the poverty of philosophy. God damn it, you might think a man had no business to be writing, to be a poet unless some philosophic stinker gave him permission.”
―William Carlos Williams



“My first poem was a bolt from the blue … it broke a spell of disillusion and suicidal despondence. … it filled me with soul satisfying joy”
―William Carlos Williams






 
“Poets are being pursued by the philosophers today, out of the poverty of

philosophy. God damn it, you might think a man had no business to be writing,

to be a poet unless some philosophic stinker gave him permission.”
[Letter to James Laughlin (14 January 1944), published in The Selected Letters

of William Carlos Williams (1957) edited by John C. Thirlwall, p. 219 -

General sources]
―William Carlos Williams








“One thing I am convinced more and more is true and that is this: the only way to be truly happy is to make others happy. When you realize that and take advantage of the fact, everything is made perfect.”
―William Carlos Williams


  
“It is in tune with the tempo of life — scattered yet welded into the whole, — broken, yet woven together.”
[On his work, in an interview in The New York Herald Tribune (18 January 1932) - General sources]
―William Carlos Williams




“Poetry demands a different material than prose. It uses another facet of the same fact … the spontaneous conformation of language as it is heard.”
[Detail & Prosody for the Poem Patterson given to James Laughlin (1939), now at Houghton Library - General sources]
―William Carlos Williams




“Poets are being pursued by the philosophers today, out of the poverty of philosophy. God damn it, you might think a man had no business to be writing, to be a poet unless some philosophic stinker gave him permission.”
[Letter to James Laughlin (14 January 1944), published in The Selected Letters of William Carlos Williams (1957) edited by John C. Thirlwall, p. 219 - General sources]
―William Carlos Williams




“My first poem was a bolt from the blue … it broke a spell of disillusion and suicidal despondence. … it filled me with soul satisfying joy”
[The Autobiography of William Carlos Williams (1951) [W. W. Norton & Co., 1967, ISBN 978-0811202268] - General sources]
―William Carlos Williams

 
“There's a lot of bastards out there!”
[General sources]
―William Carlos Williams




“I liked this because of the elimination of the essential in the composition.
I cut it down and down, and down. This squeezed up to make it vivid.”
[Annotation on Chicory and Daisies (1915) on John C. Thirlwell's copy of The Collected Earlier Poems (c. 1958) - General sources]
―William Carlos Williams



  
“I thought my friends were damn fools, because they didn't know any better way of conducting their lives. Still they conformed better than I to a code. I wanted to conform but I couldn't so I wrote my poetry.”
[Annotations on John C. Thirlwell's copy of The Collected Earlier Poems (c. 1958) - General sources]
―William Carlos Williams





“Being an art form, verse cannot be free in the sense of having no limitations or guiding principle.”
[As quoted in Free Verse.Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics 2nd ed (1975) - General sources]
―William Carlos Williams



 
“So different, this man And this woman: A stream flowing In a field.”
[Poetry Chicago, 1916) - Marriage (1916)]
―William Carlos Williams





“Lift your flowers on bitter stems chickory! Lift them up out of the scorched ground! Bear no foliage but give yourself wholly to that! Strain under them you bitter stems that no beast eats — and scorn greyness!”
[Chicory and Daisies - Al Que Quiere! (1917)]
―William Carlos Williams




“The earth cracks and is shriveled up; the wind moans piteously; the sky goes
out if you should fail.”
[Chicory and Daisies - Al Que Quiere! (1917)]
―William Carlos Williams



“Why do I write today? The beauty of the terrible faces of our nonentities stirs me to it: colored women day workers— old and experienced— returning home at dusk, in cast off clothing faces like old Florentine oak.”
[Al Que Quiere! (1917)]
―William Carlos Williams



“The set pieces of your faces stir me — leading citizens — but not in the same way.”
[Al Que Quiere! (1917)]
―William Carlos Williams




“I lie here thinking of you:— the stain of love is upon the world!”
[Love Song - Al Que Quiere! (1917)]
―William Carlos Williams




“It's a strange courage you give me ancient star: Shine alone in the sunrise toward which you lend no part!”
[El Hombre - Al Que Quiere! (1917)]
―William Carlos Williams



“Who shall say I am not the happy genius of my household?”
[Danse Russe - Al Que Quiere! (1917)]
―William Carlos Williams



“So much depends upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens”
[The Red Wheelbarrow - Spring and All (1923)]
―William Carlos Williams


“By the road to the contagious hospital under the surge of the blue mottled
clouds driven from the northeast — a cold wind.”
[Spring and All - Spring and All (1923)]
―William Carlos Williams



“The pure products of America go crazy —”
[To Elsie - Spring and All (1923)]
―William Carlos Williams



“Among the rain and lights I saw the figure 5 in gold on a red firetruck moving tense unheeded to gong clangs siren howls and wheels rumbling through the dark city.”
[The Great Figure - Sour Grapes (1921)]
―William Carlos Williams


“I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which you were probably
saving for breakfast Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold”
[This Is Just to Say - Collected Poems 1921-1931 (1934)]
―William Carlos Williams


“He's come out of the man and he's let the man go —”
[Collected Poems 1921-1931 (1934)]
―William Carlos Williams


“Among of green stiff old bright broken branch come white sweet May again”
[The Locust Tree in Flower - An Early Martyr and Other Poems (1935)]
―William Carlos Williams











More: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/22539



Corruption and stereotypes by The Economist



Three bureaucrats walk into a bar  

 by By J.P.



Anecdote:

A Chinese bureaucrat, an Indian bureaucrat and an African bureaucrat walk into a bar. They’ve known each other for years, having met every year at UN conferences, and they’ve become friends.

But, talking over drinks, they realise that they’ve only ever met at conferences. So the Chinese bureaucrat suggests that after the next one, in Beijing, they come to his house to relax for a few days.

They all agree, and when the next conference ends, they set off. They get a plane at Beijing’s airport, fly to a provincial city and speed off down a pristine six-lane highway to a large house in the suburbs.

"This is a really nice house," the African bureaucrat says. "How did you afford it on your government salary?"

"Well, did you see that new highway we drove on? I just took some money from the project and spent it on the house."

The other bureaucrats nod, obviously impressed. For the next few days the three men have a wonderful time, and agree to meet again after the next summit, this time at the Indian bureaucrat’s house.

A year goes by, the conference ends and they set off. They fly from the airport in Delhi to a little provincial town. Then they jolt down a long, potholed road until they get to a large mansion.

The Chinese bureaucrat, obviously impressed, asks how the Indian bureaucrat could have afforded it. The Indian bureaucrat replies, "Well, did you see that highway we drove on? I just took some money out of the project and spent it on the house."

A year later they are in Africa, and they all agree to head to the African bureaucrat’s house. They go to the airport, and fly to a smaller airport in the middle of the jungle. From there they board a helicopter and fly over a pristine jungle to a large palace surrounded by military guards. They look out over trees as far as the eye can see.

The Indian and Chinese bureaucrats are amazed, and they are both eager to know how he managed to afford such a palace.

"Well, did you see that highway we drove on?"
the African bureaucrat asks.

 







Corruption and stereotypes:   http://www.economist.com/node/21586420


 




 

The Art of Choosing








We all think we're good at making choices; many of us even enjoy making them. Sheena Iyengar looks deeply at choosing and has discovered many surprising things about it. For instance, her famous "jam study," done while she was a grad student, quantified a counterintuitive truth about decisionmaking -- that when we're presented with too many choices, like 24 varieties of jam, we tend not to choose anything at all. (This and subsequent, equally ingenious experiments have provided rich material for Malcolm Gladwell and other pop chroniclers of business and the human psyche.)

Iyengar's research has been informing business and consumer-goods marketing since the 1990s. But she and her team at the Columbia Business School throw a much broader net. Her analysis touches, for example, on the medical decisionmaking that might lead up to choosing physician-assisted suicide, on the drawbacks of providing too many choices and options in social-welfare programs, and on the cultural and geographical underpinning of choice. Her book The Art of Choosing shares her research in an accessible and charming story that draws examples from her own life.


Watch a Facebook-exclusive short video from Sheena Iyengar: "Ballet Slippers" >>
Read more about Sheena Iyengar on the TED Blog »
Email to a friend »

Quotes by Sheena Iyengar

 

  • “[Americans] think that choice, as seen through the American lens, best fulfills an innate and universal desire for choice in all humans. Unfortunately, these beliefs are  
  • “First-generation children were strongly influenced by their immigrant parents’ approach to choice. For them, choice was not just a way of defining and asserting their individuality, but a way to create community and harmony by deferring to the choices of people whom they trusted and respected.”

  • “The American paradigm … leaves little room for interdependence or an acknowledgment of individual fallibility. It requires that everyone treat choice as a private and self-defining act.”

  • “In reality, many choices are between things that are not that much different. The value of choice depends on our ability to perceive differences between the options.”

  • “The phantasmagoria, the actual experience that we try to understand and organize through narrative, varies from place to place. No single narrative serves the needs of everyone everywhere.”

  • “The typical American reports making about 70 [choices] in a typical day.”

  • “The typical Walmart today offers you 100,000 products.”

  • “The key to getting the most from choice is to be choosy about choosing.”




    Link: 
    http://www.ted.com/talks/sheena_iyengar_on_the_art_of_choosing.html




11/25/2013

FT video

2m
Did you know that FT video is free to watch? For the latest, visit

Edatis a startup DNA enginneering company

Iran Nuclear Deal

View this content on Wall Street Journal's website

Iran's Nuclear Triumph: Tehran can continue to enrich uranium at...

Tehran can continue to enrich uranium at 10,000 working centrifuges, writes the Wall Street Journal in an editorial. 



New York Times Wall Street Journal editorials on Iran deal worth reading



 
 
 
 
 
 

Reverend Billy Talen to stand trial for preaching on bank's environmental record

Reverend Billy faces year in jail for JPMorgan Chase toad protest

Billy Talen to stand trial for preaching on bank's environmental record accompanied by choir members wearing toad hats 




 

VOLCANO SPAWNS A NEW ISLAND

 




Another investment bubble coming to Silicon Valley? Get skeptical like Bloomberg


If It Looks Like a Bubble and Floats Like a Bubble …

By NICK BILTON

Though Silicon Valley insists there is not a technology bubble, average investors should be cautious, especially when many highly valued companies have yet to produce earnings.




Signs of Change in News Mission at Bloomberg

By AMY CHOZICK, NATHANIEL POPPER, EDWARD WONG and DAVID CARR

Bloomberg faces newsroom layoffs, a shift in emphasis back to financial news and skepticism from the business side that investigative journalism might not be worth the potential problems it could create for terminal sales.
. Graphic  Graphic: Bloomberg's Empire






11/24/2013

WHOOPING CRANE MIGRATION

The whooping cranes, part of North America's tallest flying bird species, have been in pens since last month and are now being led by Operation Migration with two ultralight aircraft on a journey through Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia to reach a wintering habitat at St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge in the Gulf Coast.

 A new wild flock of Whooping cranes is being reintroduced to the eastern United States, where whoopers had not flown for over a century. In Fall 2013, Operation Migration are leading this year's new chicks from Wisconsin to Florida.


                 


 


 






















































For more information and a video, go to:  http//www.crocandcrane.blogspot.ca














11/23/2013

THE ANCIENT WISDOM OF INDIA

Wisdom of India

What India Can Teach The Rest Of The World About Living Well

The Huffington Post  |  By Carolyn Gregoire Posted:   |  Updated: 11/12/2013 11:51 am EST
India has been described by some traditional texts as Sa Prathama Sanskrati Vishvavara, the first and supreme culture in the world. To this day, the South Asian country remains a hotspring of ancient wisdom on mind-body health and spirituality.

This wisdom has been steadily permeating American life for the past century. Mindfulness -- the cultivation of a focused awareness on the present moment, a concept with origins in ancient Indian philosophy -- is "gaining its fair share of attention" in the West, with increasing numbers of Americans practicing meditation, according to a recent New York Times Magazine cover story.   Words like "guru," "karma" "nirvana" and "om" are firmly situated in our cultural vocabulary, and yoga and meditation have become the favorite pasttime of everyone from supermodels to high-powered CEOs.

The Indian way has spread far beyond the U.S., and tourists from around the world are flocking to the densely-populated country in search of inner peace. India is the fastest-growing destination for wellness tourism, with an average of 22 percent annual growth, according to recent data from Stanford Research Center funded by Spafinder Wellness.

Here are 10 reasons we should look to India as an example of what it means to live well.

It's the birthplace of yoga.
yogi
Arguably India's most popular export, yoga (Sanskrit for "divine union") has been passed down from guru to student for many centuries. Traditionally, yoga is practiced with the goal of stilling the thoughts of the unruly mind so that the individual can eventually achieve moksha (liberation). Aside from yoga's spiritual aims, the physical and mental health benefits of the practice are extensive, from decreased anxiety to reduced neck and lower back pain to increased sexual function.

They view health from a holistic perspective.
ayurveda
The ancient Indian wisdom system of ayurveda is founded on two guiding principles: 1) that the mind and body are inextricably linked, and 2) that the mind has more power than anything else to heal and transform the body, according to The Chopra Center.
This Indian "science of life" has used natural remedies to treat a wide variety of physical ailments for centuries, and modern science is just beginning to catch on to its wisdom. Through dietary and lifestyle changes, ayurvedic principles are used to prevent and treat illnesses, and to help individuals achieve optimal health and well-being.

They embrace vegetarianism.
india vegetables
An estimated 80 percent of India's population identifies as Hindu, and the traditional Hindu diet is vegetarian. In the traditional yogic text the Mahabharata, a vegetarian diet is said to be sattvic -- meaning that it is linked with purity, goodness, and enlightenment.
"The practitioner of yoga has to adopt a vegetarian diet in order to attain one-pointed evolution and spiritual evolution," master practitioner B.K.S. Iyengar writes in "Light On Yoga."
Additionally, a vegetarian diet has been linked with major health benefits, including increased longevity and a lower risk of diabetes, heart disease, and high blood pressure.

They have strong family values.
india family
In Indian culture, there is a strong emphasis on family as the primary social unit, and families tend to be large, providing a strong social support system and network of community ties (a key factor in longevity). Indian families often live together in multi-generational "joint family" units.
"Through a multitude of kinship ties, each person is linked with kin in villages and towns near and far," according to the Asia Society. "Almost everywhere a person goes, he can find a relative from whom he can expect moral and practical support."

They cook with turmeric.
india spices
Turmeric is a popular spice in Indian cooking, and it's a superfood that can boost longevity and ward off illness. The spice has long been used medicinally in the Chinese and Indian traditions, and for good reason: Turmeric is packed with anti-inflammatory properties, and is also anti-carcinogenic, anti-fungal and anti-bacterial. Plus, it makes a delicious (and colorful) curry.

They're making low-cost health innovations.
india hospital
Although the Indian health care system is often criticized (and is certainly an overburdened system), some Indian institutions have succeed in creating a model for good-quality health care at a low cost.
"U.S. hospitals would do well to take a leaf or two from the book of Indian doctors and hospitals that are treating problems of the eye, heart, and kidney all the way to maternity care, orthopedics, and cancer for less than 5% to 10% of U.S. costs," Vijay Govindarajan and Ravi Ramamurti write in a recent Harvard Business Review blog, explaining that the Indian hospitals they studied still met international care standards.
Low cost, in this case, doesn't mean low quality -- Govindarajan and Ramamurti argue that because patients pay 60-70 percent of health care costs out of pocket, Indian hospitals have had to cut costs while also improving their standard of care, doing so through task shifting, frugality, and a "hub-and-spoke" model of dispersement. More and more Indian corporations are also joining the fight to provide good quality, affordable health care.

They live in color.
india silk
Every year, India celebrates the arrival of spring with Holi, the Hindu Festival of Colors, which ushers in the season with singing, dancing, and bright colors.
Many visitors to India (sometimes called the "land of color") are taken with the bright, beautiful colors everywhere. Many of these colors are symbolic in the culture and in the Hindu tradition -- and according to some color experts, these bright hues may have a positive effect on mood.

They have a culture that prizes compassion.
india poverty
Compassion is a traditional Indian value, and also central to Buddhism, which espouses a philosophy of compassion balanced by wisdom.
In Indian culture today, there is also a belief in karma. According to the law of karma, every action must have a reaction, and every individual reaps what he sows. In the yoga tradition, karma yoga, the path of selfless action and selfless ervice, is one path to liberation.
"Once you become selfless you are free from attachments," wrote Swami Rama, explaining that one can achieve freedom from both the laws of karma and from mental confusion.

They know that breathing is crucial to good health.
calm down
Breathing is a critical aspect of good health that's frequently overlooked in Western cultures, where we tend to focus more on the role of food and diet in preventative health care.
For thousands of years, the yogic practice of pranayama (Sanskrit for "extension of the life-force") has been used as a method for reducing stress and healing the body and mind through targeted breathing exercises. In Kundalini yoga, a traditional method of yoga popularized in the West by Yogi Bhajan, the breath is thought to be an individual's connection to the divine within, and breathing exercises are used to connect us more deeply with our own life force.

They celebrate the power of music.
kirtan
The birth country of the legendary Ravi Shankar -- and the place that "transformed" George Harrison's life -- has produced some of the world's greatest music. In India, music is often a spiritual pursuit. Devotional chanting, also known as kirtan, is thought to be a healing practice.
When the reknowned Indian guru Paramhansa Yogananda performed a kirtan at Carnegie Hall in New York City in 1926, the event had a strong impact on the audience.
"For one hour and twenty-five minutes, the thousands of voices of the entire audience chanted...in a divine atmosphere of joyous praise," Yogananda later recalled. "The next day many men and women testified to the God-perception and the healing of body, mind, and soul that had taken place during the sacred chanting."

They know how to do a memorable tribute.
taj mahal

They value inner wisdom.
india meditation
Indian spirituality, stemming from the teachings of the Vedas, the source of ancient yoga philosophy and the early foundation texts of Hindu and Buddhist faiths, stresses the truth of inwardness. Within the Indian belief system, divinity is to be found by accessing the divine Self (atman) within the self. Liberation can be attained through realizing the unity of atman and brahman (the whole of the universe).

According to "American Veda" author Philip Goldberg, this inward-facing spirituality that has spread out from India is creating radical change in the West. Goldberg told the Huffington Post:  We’re becoming a nation of yogis. What I mean by that is that there are people whose orientation towards life and their orientation towards their spiritual life is very yogic. They may never set foot on a yoga mat, they may never do an asana in their lives. They have a meditation practice and turn inwards in their approach to whatever they define as spiritual –- their relation to the universe and their development of an inner connection to something bigger than themselves. People are taking charge of their spiritual lives in a very yogic way.

11/22/2013

Hogan's Heroes (1965–1971) starring Bob Crane

File:Bob Crane Sigrid Valdis Hogans Heroes 1969.JPG 

Hogan's Heroes (1965–1971)


In 1965, Crane was offered the starring role in a television comedy pilot about a German P.O.W. camp. Hogan's Heroes became a hit and finished in the Top Ten in its first year on the air. The series lasted six seasons, and Crane was nominated for an Emmy Award twice, in 1966 and 1967. During its run, he met Patricia Olson, who played Hilda under the stage name Sigrid Valdis. He divorced his wife of twenty years and married Olson on the set of the show in 1970. 
 

 

 

Link:   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Crane





11/21/2013

Pipe cleaner artist

Pipe cleaner artist


Pipe cleaner artist

Pipe cleaner artist




































Pipe cleaner artist








 

 Pipe cleaner artist

 Pipe cleaner artist



 Pipe cleaner artist


Pipe cleaner artist




These are the mind-bending sculptures that take up to 40 hours to create - as they're made entirely from pipe cleaners.

The fuzzy flexible figures are made entirely from the tobacco cleaning tools - which are now more commonly found strewn across nurseries and art classrooms - to construct the incredible life-like animals.

California-based artist Lauren Ryan meticulously curls, bends, shapes and weaves the pipe cleaners into positions, using the fluffy texture to mimic the fur of polar bears, wolves, horses, leopards and foxes.

Lauren flatly refuses to use glue, insisting it is cheating, and has been perfecting her techniques since she was just twelve years old. (CATERS) less






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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/photos/pipe-cleaner-artist-1384892399-slideshow/